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School district in Maryland, USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Baltimore County Public Schools is the school district in charge of all public schools in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States.[2] It is the 25th largest school system in the US as of 2013.[3] The school system is managed by the board of education, headquartered in Towson. Since July 1, 2023, the superintendent is Myriam Rogers.[4]
Baltimore County Public Schools | |
---|---|
Address | |
6901 North Charles Street
Towson , Maryland, 21204United States | |
District information | |
Type | Public |
Grades | PreK–12[1] |
Superintendent | Myriam Rogers |
NCES District ID | 2400120[1] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 111,084[1] |
Teachers | 7,821.41[1] |
Staff | 7,517.07[1] |
Student–teacher ratio | 14.2[1] |
Other information | |
Website | www |
All areas in Baltimore County are unincorporated; as there are no incorporated cities in Baltimore County, all place names are neighborhoods, and have no legal jurisdiction over their areas. There are currently 106 elementary schools, 30 middle schools, and 25 high schools in the district. A number of these are magnet schools that students from any part of Baltimore County can apply to attend. In addition, there is one charter school and several specialty schools.
In the mid-1980s, Baltimore County shifted the grades in the intermediate-level schools. Until this time, the schools were called "junior high schools" and had grades 7–9. The 9th grade was moved into the high school and the 6th grade was moved in from nearby elementary schools, creating the current "middle school" model with grades 6–8.[citation needed]
BCPS has a $1.76 billion budget as per 2016, with a total enrollment of 111,127 students. The majority of its students are white (42.1%) and black (38.8%). Asians and Latinos are minorities with 6.7% and 7.7% enrollment respectively.
In 2014, Sean McComb of Patapsco High School was named National Teacher of the Year. Superintendent S. Dallas Dance was appointed to the President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans in August 2014.
The school system was accepted into the prestigious 32-member League of Innovative Schools in February 2013. BCPS is the only school system in Maryland to be designated as ISO 9001 international certification for management.[5]
The school district is led by superintendent Myriam Rogers and her cabinet, consisting of a chief of staff as well as academic, communications, administrative operations, and human resource officers.[4][6]
On November 24, 2020, the school system's computer network suffered a ransomware attack suspected to be due to Ryuk malware. County school officials characterized it as "a catastrophic attack on our technology system" and said it could be weeks before recovery is complete.[7] The school system's director of information technology said, "This is a ransomware attack which encrypts data as it sits and does not access or remove it from our system".[8] Prior to the crippling malware attack, state auditors from the Maryland Office of Legislative Audits performed a periodic audit of the Baltimore County School System's computer network in 2019. They found several vulnerabilities in the system, such as insufficient monitoring of security activities, publicly accessible servers not isolated from the school system's internal network, and a lack of "intrusion detection ... for untrusted traffic".[9][10] Avi Rubin, Technical Director of the Information Security Institute at Johns Hopkins University, said the auditors' discovery of "computers that were running on the internal network with no intrusion detection capabilities" was of particular concern.[11] Although the final report by the Maryland Office of Legislative Audits was released on November 19, 2020, the auditors initially warned the school system of its findings in October 2019.[9]
To create 21st century learning environments that allow for student-centered learning experiences within the school system's "Framework for Teaching and Learning", Baltimore County Public Schools has established Students and Teachers Accessing Tomorrow (S.T.A.T.).[12] S.T.A.T. is aligned with the school system's "Theory of Action", part of which is to "ensure that every school has an equitable, effective digital learning environment".[13] The work that supports S.T.A.T.'s goals includes the district's conversions of curriculum, instruction, assessment, organizational development, infrastructure, communications, policy, and budget.[14]
In 1978, due to a dip in enrollment projections, the elimination of six elementary schools and the repurposing of two middle schools was proposed by the board. This was eventually implemented by then superintendent Robert Y. Dubel, despite significant public objection. At the January 11, 1978 board meeting, Dundalk, Gray Manor, Inverness, Lutherville, Parkville, and Towson elementary schools were proposed to be closed; Eastwood and Ruxton elementary schools were proposed to be repurposed as special education facilities; and Towsontown Junior was proposed to be repurposed as Central Vocational-Technical Center.[15]
Overcrowding in some elementary schools due to population growth became an issue in 2007, particularly at four elementary schools in the Towson area — Hampton, Riderwood, Rodgers Forge, and Stoneleigh — which were said to have 451 over their 1,665-pupil capacity.[16] In December 2007, a parents' advocacy group, Towson Families United, called for construction of a new elementary school to alleviate overcrowding, with the group threatening a demonstration near the courthouse office of Baltimore County Executive James T. Smith Jr.[17] On May 6, 2008, the school board announced that a new school would open in 2010 near the existing Ridge Ruxton School on Charles Street.[17]
Overcrowding continues to plague the BCPS school system. In 2018 it was particularly bad in the North East area of the school system, where there was a deficit of over 1,700 seats on the elementary level.[citation needed] Perry Hall Middle school was on track to be the largest school in the county, with more than 400 students beyond maximum capacity.[18]
There are currently 106 elementary schools:
There are currently 30 middle schools:[citation needed]
There are currently 25 high schools:
These schools can be attended by any Baltimore County student through an application process. Students attend these schools as full-time students.
High school Advanced Placement scores 2015
High school | High school enrollment | AP exams | AP exams 3+ | AP exams 3+ % |
---|---|---|---|---|
Catonsville | 1758 | 799 | 568 | 71.1% |
Chesapeake | 991 | 193 | 59 | 30.6% |
Dulaney | 1803 | 1791 | 1493 | 83.4% |
Dundalk | 1435 | 151 | 30 | 19.9% |
Eastern Technology | 1106 | 770 | 581 | 75.5% |
Carver | 853 | 511 | 410 | 80.2% |
Hereford | 1188 | 880 | 657 | 74.7% |
Kenwood | 1629 | 268 | 69 | 25.7% |
Lansdowne | 1234 | 172 | 52 | 30.2% |
Loch Raven | 884 | 454 | 269 | 59.3% |
Milford Mill | 1519 | 286 | 45 | 15.7% |
New Town | 997 | 124 | 62 | 50.0% |
Overlea | 963 | 122 | 33 | 27.0% |
Owings Mills | 932 | 250 | 93 | 37.2% |
Parkville | 1596 | 315 | 156 | 49.5% |
Patapsco | 1434 | 298 | 111 | 37.2% |
Perry Hall | 2105 | 964 | 609 | 63.2% |
Pikesville | 840 | 492 | 336 | 68.3% |
Randallstown | 1021 | 180 | 54 | 30.0% |
Sparrows Point | 860 | 135 | 58 | 43.0% |
Towson | 1444 | 1303 | 1031 | 79.1% |
Western | 926 | 515 | 418 | 81.2% |
Woodlawn | 1385 | 76 | 15 | 19.7% |
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